You can prevent it by keeping good pressure on your opponent, good base, and good posture. By pressure on your opponent I mean one arm is usually gripping thier gi in the middle and turning your fist and pushing into their solar plexus while the other hand is on their hip bone pushing down.

To defend against it push them back down before they get up to you. I like to drive my head right into their solar plexus and put at least one of my hands on their hip to keep them from sitting up.

A failed situp sweet can also transition to a guillotine and a kimura, so be careful of your head and arm placement when you stop the sweep.

I'd be interested in a description of the step out and take the back from this. I would think that would be difficult in that the person sweeping has their guard closed and then opens it to sweep you, though their legs are still in the way.

By "hip heist", I mean when the person on bottom has guard, sits up and to the side, and ends up in mount.

This is usually called the situp sweep or hip bump sweep. I don't recommend referring to it as a hip heist, since most people don't call it that and a hip heist refers to a different move in wrestling, which means you're likely to meet with a lot of confusion.

I would like to know what the guy in the guard can do when the bottom guy attempts this.

Post with your arm to keep from going over. If they're not a retard and are tying up your arm, then when they start going for it, drive forward and try to press their back flat to the ground to prevent them from sitting up and getting posture. Back flat to the ground == no hip bump sweep.

I had a guy who was really fucking good at this. The drill we were doing was where I started from mount and he would just do this every time. Nothing I tried to do was effective, and I had a lot of chances to try out different stuff. I think the dude just had that **** down. It was unstoppable, though he did outweigh me by at least 100lbs, maybe that's why.

This is usually called the situp sweep or hip bump sweep. I don't recommend referring to it as a hip heist, since most people don't call it that and a hip heist refers to a different move in wrestling, which means you're likely to meet with a lot of confusion.

Hey all, new poster, been doing BJJ for a few months now. Some people call this hip heist because that's what Renzo called it in his book "Mastering ju-jitsu". In the club I go to, they didn't call it anything when they taught it to us, so it remains that nameless move to me.

I find the best way to prevent this is to keep both elbows tight in, with one hand firmly pinning his hip on one side and the other pressed into his sternum to hold him down.